Watched a new show on TruTV, "Combat Pawn" this morning. I DVR'd it from last evening.
First show in the new series, this is set in a Fort Bragg, North Carolina gun shop by the name of "Guns Plus"... owned and operated, apparently, by vets.
In the first transaction, a guy comes in with a H&K G36... not a SL8 cosmetic conversion, a real G36... a post 1986 ban, select fire weapon. There was no discussion about who he was or how he happened to come by this gun... just an "I want to sell it, you wanna' buy it?" kinda deal. Was he a SOT? Chief LEO? Who knows.
From an educational perspective, I found this odd. People who have no understanding of class 3 - title 2 - pre ban - post ban, may believe that these post '86 guns are somehow... available to Joe Shooter. Perhaps they thought the details of it would bog down the entertainment value of a half hour show. I guess that makes sense.
A transaction for a S&W top break "lemon squeezer" revolver was conducted.
Pricing for these guns is all over the map, so without inspection, I don't know if the $250 offered and taken was fair.
Woman pawned her Yugo AK... nothing special.
Man bought Glock for wife... had it laser engraved that day. Drama with laser engraver functionality. Drama with recent gun death of wife's Father. Sad and slightly weird.
They apparently shoot every gun they buy... or at least all the guns they bought in this episode.
Other than the guns, it's kinda dull. I assume there will be more interactive drama as the show builds a following.
At least, so far, they don't offer to turn grand-dad's old Remington 870 bird gun into a tactical shotgun for only 4-5 thousand dollars.
I don't mind drama... I don't even mind when they blow stuff up for effect. It is mass "entertainment" after all and not really aimed at the knowledgeable shooting public.
I'll keep watching... hopefully, it will improve with age.
Cheers,
C
First show in the new series, this is set in a Fort Bragg, North Carolina gun shop by the name of "Guns Plus"... owned and operated, apparently, by vets.
In the first transaction, a guy comes in with a H&K G36... not a SL8 cosmetic conversion, a real G36... a post 1986 ban, select fire weapon. There was no discussion about who he was or how he happened to come by this gun... just an "I want to sell it, you wanna' buy it?" kinda deal. Was he a SOT? Chief LEO? Who knows.
From an educational perspective, I found this odd. People who have no understanding of class 3 - title 2 - pre ban - post ban, may believe that these post '86 guns are somehow... available to Joe Shooter. Perhaps they thought the details of it would bog down the entertainment value of a half hour show. I guess that makes sense.
A transaction for a S&W top break "lemon squeezer" revolver was conducted.
Pricing for these guns is all over the map, so without inspection, I don't know if the $250 offered and taken was fair.
Woman pawned her Yugo AK... nothing special.
Man bought Glock for wife... had it laser engraved that day. Drama with laser engraver functionality. Drama with recent gun death of wife's Father. Sad and slightly weird.
They apparently shoot every gun they buy... or at least all the guns they bought in this episode.
Other than the guns, it's kinda dull. I assume there will be more interactive drama as the show builds a following.
At least, so far, they don't offer to turn grand-dad's old Remington 870 bird gun into a tactical shotgun for only 4-5 thousand dollars.
I don't mind drama... I don't even mind when they blow stuff up for effect. It is mass "entertainment" after all and not really aimed at the knowledgeable shooting public.
I'll keep watching... hopefully, it will improve with age.
Cheers,
C